Misplaced Pages

Clinton F. Larson

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
American writer
The topic of this article may not meet Misplaced Pages's notability guideline for academics. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted.
Find sources: "Clinton F. Larson" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Clinton Foster Larson (1919–1994) was an American poet and playwright and the founding editor of BYU Studies.

Larson was born in American Fork, Utah to Clinton Larson and his wife, the former Lillian Foster. Larson started college at the University of Utah at age 16 with plans to study medicine. However, he had an English class with Brewster Ghiselin who convinced him to that he had potential as a writer. He served as an LDS missionary in England and then in New England from 1939–41. In 1942 he married Naomi Barlow in the Salt Lake Temple. Around this time he entered the Army Air Corps in which he served during the duration of World War II. He completed his bachelor's degree at the University of Utah and later earned a master's degree from the same institution in 1948. He received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Denver.

Larson was professor at Brigham Young University. In the early 1970s he was made BYU's first poet-in-residence.

Possibly Larson's most widely read work was his 16-volume text of the Illustrated Stories of the Book of Mormon published by Promised Land Publications.

Works

  • Coriantumer and Moroni (1962)
  • The Mantle of the Prophet and Other Plays (1966)
  • The Prophet (1971)
  • Romaunt of the Rose: A Tapestry of Poems (1982)
  • The Civil War Poems (1988)
  • Homestead in Idaho (1989)

Sources

Categories: